International workshop: Curating climate: Museums as ‘contact … · Booklet Content Curating...
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Booklet
Content
Curating Climate Collaboratory
Theme
Core participants
International workshop: Curating Climate - Museums as ‘contact zones’ of
climate research, education and activism
About the Natural History Museum and the Klimahuset
About OSEH
About HEI
Contact
Venue
Access by public transport
Transport to the reception at Nobel Peace Center
Program
Monday 28th October
Tuesday 29th October
International workshop:
Curating climate: Museums as ‘contact zones’ of
climate research, education and activism
Oslo, Norway, 28th-29th October 2019
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Curating Climate Collaboratory
The international workshop is organized by the Curating Climate Collaboratory, funded by the Oslo
School of Environmental Humanities as a long-term collaborator research program. The goal of the
collaboratory is to explore the dynamic and transgressive field of the ‘climate museum’.
It is positioned in a unique and highly interdisciplinary space of encounters that connects the sciences
and the humanities, academic and public spheres, research and action. The workshop is intended as a
first step in establishing research and engagement with the topic.
What are the competences museums need to develop in order to engage with the multiscalar and
complex phenomenon? Do we need new institutions or are established museums capable of rethinking
their approaches and use their resources to foster understanding and action to engage with the global
environmental crisis? Should the focus be on the sustainable development goals, the Agenda 2030,
climate change or even the Anthropocene?
Theme
In the current environment disenchantment with the forms and channels used to communicate the
challenges of climate change is growing. The scientific debate is often criticized for failing to provide a
narrative able to relate to the lived experiences of a larger public. The mere distribution of facts is
increasingly questioned in its ability to overcome complacency and to encourage change.
Museums in contrast provide communication rather than information, engaging in translation rather
than simple transmission. They are also widely perceived as impartial actors with established patterns of
transnational cooperation, an essential requisite for meeting the inherently global challenges climate
change. However, museums must also be prepared to relinquish some of their more cherished notions,
such as full curatorial authority and exclusive control over their own spaces.
They will have to revisit their collections, exhibition designs and expert networks as well as develop
their cross-societal appeal. Under these challenging terms, they could provide a readymade
infrastructure for climate change communication and co-creation.
Core participants
Dominik Collet
UiO
Bergsveinn
Thorsson
UiO
Brita Brenna
UiO
Torkjell Leira
NHO, UiO
Morien Rees
ICOM Norway
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International workshop: Curating Climate - Museums as ‘contact zones’ of climate research,
education and activism
The workshop brings together people working in the museum and heritage sector, researchers, artists,
activists and policy makers. It is hosted by Oslo’s new Klimahuset under the umbrella of Oslo Green
Capital 2019 and organized by the Curating Climate Collaboratory funded by Oslo School of
Environmental Humanities. The international workshop has received additional support from UiO
Energy and Heritage Experience Initiative.
About the Natural History Museum and the Klimahuset
The Natural History Museum at the University of Oslo is Norway’s most comprehensive natural history
collection. For almost 200 years, preserved plant specimens, animal specimens, rocks, minerals and
fossils have been collected, studied and preserved here.
The Botanical Garden, part of the Museum, is not only popular for recreation, but is a scientific
collection in itself.
The Klimahuset (Climate House) opens in the Botanical gardens in Oslo spring 2020. It will be a new
and exciting arena for communicating research on climate and environmental issues. Children,
teenagers and their whole families will be able to learn more about what climate change means, to get to
know the several solutions that exist and to get inspired towards action. From early morning until late at
night, the Climate House will showcase research-based exhibitions, lectures, films and debates.
About OSEH
The Oslo School of Environmental Humanities (OSEH) is an initiative that seeks to strengthen
interdisciplinary research and teaching on climate change and the environment. We hope to bring the
expertise of the humanities to bear more directly on environmental research, public debates, and policy
discussions.
About HEI
The Heritage Experience Initiative (HEI) aims at developing critical heritage research with a direct
societal impact and experiment with new teaching models. We will achieve this by integrating
researchers, students and heritage professionals working across different disciplines, conceptual and
methodological approaches, empirical contexts and institutions.
Contact
For enquiries about the workshop, please contact:
Bergsveinn Thorsson
Phone
+47-968 45 532
Filip Waetjen
Phone
+49-172 72 60 819
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Venue
Address: Tøyen Hovedgård and Lids hus, Botanical Garden, Natural History Museum
Sars' gate 1
0562 Oslo Norway
Access by public transport
Metro (T-bane) "Tøyen station" (all lines)
Tram no. 17 to "Lakkegata skole"
Bus no. 20 to "Munch-museet"
Bus no. 31 to "Lakkegata skole"
Bus no. 60 to "Tøyen kirke" or "Tøyen skole"
Transport to the reception at Nobel Peace Center
There will be small groups that will travel to the Nobel Peace Center together from 4 p.m. by public
transport. Otherwise:
The Nobel Peace Center is situated between Oslo City Hall and the shopping areas at Aker Brygge.
Address: Brynjulf Bulls plass 1, 0250 Oslo
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Program
At the workshop there is no printed program booklet, because we try to save paper.
Alternatively you can look at https://int-workshop-curating-climate.lineupr.com/present as a speaker or
https://int-workshop-curating-climate.lineupr.com/participate as a participant.
Monday 28th October
08:45 Registration
09:15 Welcome and introduction
09:30 Keynote: Museums: 55,000 ways to address climate change.
Henry McGhie, Curating Tomorrow
10:15 Coffee
10:45 Parallel sessions
Session 1: Sustainability, loss and hope (Tøyen Hovedgård)
Is the future of museums – museums from the future?
Ludwig Bengtsson Sonesson
The Role of Museums in Creating Climate Hope
Sarah W. Sutton
Holding hope and loss together: museums, climate change and emotion work
Anna Woodham
Session 2: Collections and display (Lids Hus)
Temporary Climate – Engaging with climate crisis at Norsk Teknisk Museum
Dr. Ageliki Lefkaditou, Nina Bratland and Torhild Skåtun
New Conversations with Collections: The V&A and Smithsonian Institution
Partnership at V&A East
Zofia Trafas White and Thomas Wide
Curating Soy - Intervention ideas for museums with long-standing permanent
exhibitions in time of the climate crisis
Magdalena Puchberger and Dr. Nina Szogs
12:00 Lunch
13:00 Parallel sessions
Session 3: Climate Change Communication (Tøyen Hovedgård)
“The psychology and pedagogy of climate change. What can museum
communication professionals learn from it?”
Dr. Maria Daskolia
Ten years of climate communication at Klimahaus Bremerhaven 8° Ost
Dr. Susanne Nawrath
"Climate Change, visualization and local curation"and “Museum of flux”
Gunnar Liestøl and Jarl Holstad
Session 4: Aesthetics and Activism (Lids Hus)
Lara Almarcegui: Forensic Material Research
Helene Romakin
Between activism and aesthetics: the role of art in the global climate effort
Dr. Natalie Tominga Hope O'Donnell
Poetics and Politics of Atmospheric Care: Imaginaries, data, environmentality
Hanna Husberg and Agata Marzecova
14:30 Coffee
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15:00 Klimahuset presentation and tour.
Torkjell Leira, Natural History Museum, University of Oslo
17:00 Reception at Nobel Peace Center
Drinks and light food, guided tour and presentation of KlimaLab and KlimaKontoret
Liv Astrid Sverdrup, Nicolò Sattin and August Myrseth, Nobel Peace Center
19:00 Time to explore Oslo
Tuesday 29th October
09:30 Keynote: The Anthropocene intervention: integrating humans, nature, collections
and communities.
Nicole Heller, Carnegie Museum of Natural History
10:15 Coffee
10:45 Parallel sessions
Session 5: Environmental Justice (Tøyen Hovedgård)
Re-Imagining the Museum with Young People: approaching climate change
through environmental justice
Dr. Hannah-Lee Chalk
To avoid preaching to the choir
Víctor González Quintanilla
Human Nature. About Consumption and the Future of Our Planet
Martin Schultz
Session 6: Multi-Stakeholder Environment (Lids Hus)
Learning about Environmental Change in the Bhutan Himalayas
Dr. Sameer Honwad and Dr. Shivaraj Bhattarai
Museums Have No Borders: Museums as Part of a Network of Change
Georgina McDowall
Museum shops: On the frontline of museums’ climate change reduction strategies
Dr. Jamie Larkin
12:00 Lunch
13:00 Keynote: Molly Fannon, Museum for the United Nations - UN Live
13:45 Keynote: Sustainability in Museums. Jean Hilgersom, president of ICAMT
14:30 Coffee
15:00 Summary Session
Please, note that the program may be subject to change.